Are accidents unintentional? Or does incompetence cause accidents?
On 2nd June 2023, three trains collided in Odisha and approximately 300 people died and about 1200 were injured, some grievously. The Prime Minister rushed to the accident site as did several other officials, and a CBI inquiry was ordered to find out the causes of the accident. Whatever be the findings, the fact is this is not India's first big rail accident, and neither will it be the last. The reason I say this is because by and large we Indians don't value life, and are quite casual about safety issues.
The Cambridge Dictionary description for an accident is, "something bad that happens that is not expected or intended and that often damages something or injures someone". I request you to kindly note the words, "not expected". In my view this definition of accident does not apply to India because accidents are expected in India. Yes, they are expected, and even accepted!
I am saying this because whenever any accident, be it road, rail or any other kind takes place, the first thing our government does is offer compensation along with condolences. And then we go back to living our regular lives, until the next big accident, which we know will happen sooner than later. So the Cambridge Dictionary definition of accident certainly does not apply to us. Particularly in case of road accidents and fatalities, which are everyday occurrences in our country.
Now let's look at the Cambridge Dictionary definition for incompetence, "lack of ability to do something successfully or as it should be done". Please note the words "lack of ability" and "as it should be done". In my opinion this is the problem.
Most of us just don't believe in doing things the way they should be done, whether it is not jumping queues or driving on the wrong side of the road! It's all the same. And the lack of ability, this is far spread too, right from the tailor who gets your measurements wrong, to the bus driver who fails to turn in time and makes his vehicle fall into a gorge!
I think there is also this attitude of invincibility and nothing can happen to me. The figures speak for themselves. Everyday 4 to 5 people die in our county while trying to cross railway tracks! Walking or crossing on our roads also results in 50 daily deaths. This means about 19,000 pedestrians die in India annually. And the total number who are killed in road accidents every year is well over 1, 50,000!
No other country in the world loses so many people in such accidents. Simply because they don't cross railway tracks. Or walk and run across the road as and when they please, without even looking. And let's not forget the speeding or rash motorists, who crash into pedestrians.
Let me quote the headings of a few stories that I have come across in just the last one month or so. Iron rod at metro construction site falls on car. Toddler among four injured after crane collapses in Chembur, Mumbai. Excavator hits tree, branch falls on car and kills driver. SUV crashes into tractor on UP expressway, 5 of a family killed. 10 Vaishno Devi pilgrims die, 57 injured as bus falls into gorge. Tractor with 35 pilgrims falls into Rajasthan gorge, 8 dead.
If, like me, you read the newspapers, then you too must be seeing such reports on a daily basis. And of course we also have regular reports of bridges, buildings, walls, etc, breaking or collapsing. People also fall into open manholes and drains, and earlier I have even written about people driving off incomplete bridges and roads that had no signs or barricades to warn motorists the road was ending.
Can all these be termed accidents? In my view surely not. Iron rods falling from construction sites because they were not secured properly, cranes collapsing because they were lifting excess load, excavator hitting a tree, tractors that are not meant to be used to transport people falling into gorges and causing numerous deaths, all these are perfect examples of negligence, which the Cambridge Dictionary defines as "not giving enough care or attention to someone or something".
The fact that we are careless or negligent people is visible all around us. Look at how people cross roads and run in front of vehicles without a care in the world. Though we have a law, millions of people commuting on two-wheelers still don't wear helmets. The same is true for seatbelts, very few motorists buckle up. In fact, in a 5-month drive on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway, over 6,000 motorists have been booked for not wearing seatbelts and some 700 for talking on the phone while driving.
Now this talking on the phone business while driving or riding, or checking your Whatsapp messages or social media accounts, is so very common. Almost every single day I see someone either watching a reel, replying to a message or talking animatedly while driving or riding.
These morons are not just putting themselves in harm's way, but also risking the lives of other road users. If you have to look into your phone or attend to a message or call, why not just pull over and do it. But you hardly ever see anyone following this simple and safe practice. So if an accident occurs because of this, can you call it an accident? Definitely not.
Photos by Bob Rupani